Ten orations of Cicero: with selections from the LettersAmerican book Company, 1898 - 562 pagine |
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Pagina 14
... senate and vast crowds of people . The house which had been destroyed was restored at public expense . During the next five years Cicero devoted himself to his profession as advocate , taking little part in state affairs , although his ...
... senate and vast crowds of people . The house which had been destroyed was restored at public expense . During the next five years Cicero devoted himself to his profession as advocate , taking little part in state affairs , although his ...
Pagina 16
... senate on the day after his return . Cicero did not attend , pleading fatigue , but really fearing the designs of Antonius . In this meeting Antonius declared that the absence of Cicero was due to cowardice , and he threatened to ...
... senate on the day after his return . Cicero did not attend , pleading fatigue , but really fearing the designs of Antonius . In this meeting Antonius declared that the absence of Cicero was due to cowardice , and he threatened to ...
Pagina 18
... senate house , caused the senators to reject the proposals made by the skillful diplomat Cineas , the secret of his power lay in his own intense patriotism , which kindled theirs . This is the first published speech of which we have any ...
... senate house , caused the senators to reject the proposals made by the skillful diplomat Cineas , the secret of his power lay in his own intense patriotism , which kindled theirs . This is the first published speech of which we have any ...
Pagina 20
... the magistrates , and the senate . Comitia . The comitia were constitutional assemblies of the people in which and through which the people expressed their will and command . To them belonged the 20 INTRODUCTION Government.
... the magistrates , and the senate . Comitia . The comitia were constitutional assemblies of the people in which and through which the people expressed their will and command . To them belonged the 20 INTRODUCTION Government.
Pagina 23
... senate , were binding upon all the people . By the Hortensian law ( 286 B.C. ) the necessity for the senatorial sanction was removed , and from that time the assembly of the tribes was the principal legis- lative organ of the Roman ...
... senate , were binding upon all the people . By the Hortensian law ( 286 B.C. ) the necessity for the senatorial sanction was removed , and from that time the assembly of the tribes was the principal legis- lative organ of the Roman ...
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Ten orations of Cicero: with selections from the Letters Marcus Tullius Cicero Visualizzazione completa - 1898 |
Ten Orations of Cicero: With Selections from the Letters Marcus Tullius Cicero Anteprima non disponibile - 2015 |
Ten Orations of Cicero: With Selections from the Letters William Rainey Harper,Marcus Tullius Cicero,Frank Amner Gallup Anteprima non disponibile - 2015 |
Parole e frasi comuni
animō Antonius atque autem bellum Caesar Catiline causā certē Cicero Clodius cōn consul contrā Dative diē eius enim eōrum erat esset fuisse fuit Gaius gens name haec hanc hōc homines huic hūius hunc igitur illa illī illō illud illum interrex ipse ipsō īre Itaque iūdicēs Ligarius Lucullus mihi Milo Mithridates modo Mutina nēmō neque nihil nisi nōbīs nōn nōn sōlum nōs numquam nunc omnēs omnia omnibus omnis omnium ōnis oration ōris ōrum patrēs Pompey populi prae praetor prō quā quae quaestor quam quibus quid quidem Quintus Quirītēs quis quō quod rē pūblicā reī rei publicae Roman Rōmānī Rome sẽ sed etiam semper senate senātūs subst sunt suō tamen tantō tantum tātis tibi urbe urbis vērō vērum vestra virī vōbīs vōs
Brani popolari
Pagina 273 - Lucius CATILINA nobili genere natus fuit, magna vi et animi et corporis, sed ingenio malo pravoque.
Pagina 329 - It was not difficult to represent the war as a national one of the east against the west, for such it was ; it might very well be made a religious war also, and the report might be spread that the object aimed at by the army of Lucullus was the temple of the Persian Nanaea or Anaitis in Elymais or the modern Luristan, the most celebrated and the richest shrine in the whole region of the Euphrates.1 From far 1 Cicero (De Imp.
Pagina 273 - Catilina, nobili genere natus, fuit magna vi et animi et corporis, sed ingenio malo pravoque. Huic ab adulescentia bella intestina, caedes, rapinae, discordia civilis grata fuere, ibique iuventutem suam exercuit. Corpus patiens inediae, algoris, vigiliae, supra quam cuiquam credibile est.
Pagina 313 - Duo genera semper in hac civitate fuerunt eorum, qui versari in re publica atque in ea se excellentius gerere studuerunt ; quibus ex generibus alteri se populares, alteri optimates et haberi et esse voluerunt. Qui ea, quae faciebant quaeque dicebant, multitudini iucunda volebant esse, populares, qui autem ita se gerebant, ut sua consilia optimo cuique 97 probarent, optimates habebantur. " Quis ergo iste optimus quisque...
Pagina 334 - Trc&elv) to wish, and leave the realization of one's wish to others, or to fate, like jrcfeeiv ; exp etere, to wish, and apply to others for the realization of one's wish, like opeyea^ai,.
Pagina 316 - Career ; and is still to be seen on the eastern slope of the Capitoline hill, to the right of the ascent from the Forum. The name Mamertinus, usually applied to the Career, is mediaeval and not classical.
Pagina 276 - I do not know by what rites it has been consecrated and vowed by you that you think it necessary to bury it in the body of the consul.
Pagina 40 - Senatus haec intellegit, consul videt; hie 10 tarnen vivit. Vivit? immo vero etiam in senatum venit, fit publici consili particeps, notât et désignât oculis ad caedem unum quemque nostrum. Nos autem, fortes viri, satis faceré rei publicae videmur, si istius furorem ac tela vitamus. Ad mortem te, Catilina, duci iussu consulis iam pridem oportebat, in te conferri pestem quam tu in nos 15 omnis iam diu machinaris.